Geological & Geophysical Data
Acquisition and Analysis
Geophysical Surveys
Seismic Surveys play the most significant role in supplying
valuable data for oil and gas exploration.
MMS
issues permits and obtains data from 2-D and 3-D
marine seismic surveys on the OCS. Marine
seismic surveys differ from land surveys in the sources of
seismic energy, types of receivers (hydrophones), survey
geometries and the manner of acquisition. During a typical 3-D
marine seismic acquisition one or more vessels tow a number of
parallel streamers, several miles in length, separated by 75 to
150 ft. The seismic energy is produced by an array of air guns
placed behind the vessel, which are fed with high-pressure air,
and are fired every 10 to 20 seconds. Depending on the survey
design, the separation between the source and the streamers can
be varied. Up until the mid 1980-s the marine seismic surveys
were predominantly 2- D, i.e. imaging just one single vertical
section at a time. The need for more precise imaging of the
subsurface drove the technology into the domain of 3-D surveys,
which became a standard pre-requisite for oil and gas
exploration during the 1990-s. The 3-D seismic acquisition
technology has sustained constant improvements and has allowed
for some of the biggest oil and gas discoveries to be made in
the past 20 years. However a number of pitfalls still exist,
some of which are related to the subsalt imaging and the imaging
of complex geologic structures. The conventional 3-D seismic
surveys sometimes are unable to provide high quality, when more
precise imaging and accurate reservoir delineation is necessary.
To solve those problems, more advanced acquisition techniques
such as multi-component, wide-azimuth (WAZ), full –azimuth (FAZ),
multi-azimuth (MAZ) have moved from the research labs
into the practical acquisition process. These techniques can
enhance seismic imaging quality to levels not achievable before.
In the past 10 years increasingly repeat 3-D surveys have
been carried out enabling time-lapse reservoir monitoring.
A number of high-resolution seismic surveys are being
shot in order to provide analysis of the shallow layers and
identify potentially hazardous conditions such as surface
faulting, potential slope failure areas, or shallow gas
accumulations. The hardware and the design of the seismic
surveys have marked significant progress too. In addition to the
purely acquisition technologies, new seismic data processing
algorithms have been developed and more sophisticated
interpretation techniques were created. Advanced pre-stack time
and depth migration techniques have greatly enhanced the quality
of the acquired data. Amplitude Versus Offset (AVO) analysis has
further allowed better hydrocarbon indication. New software
packages were created enabling the processing and interpretation
of multi-component seismic data.
For the past 25 years MMS has issued a number of permits for
conventional 2-D and 3-D seismic surveys as well as for
multi-component, high resolution, wide-azimuth and other
advanced types of seismic surveys with majority of them being
shot in the Gulf of Mexico OCS. Still, statistically speaking, a
large percentage of the geophysical data in the MMS inventory is
two-dimensional (2-D) CDP seismic information. 2-D seismic data
has been the basis of evaluation for many of the historic MMS
lease sales. It is still one of the main sources of information
in the Alaska tract evaluations, although 3-D is increasingly
being acquired in that region.
Magnetic
surveys
measure the magnetic field or its vertical component at a series
of different locations over an area of interest. Aeromagnetic
data consist of magnetic measurements made from an aircraft, and
they offer measurements of larger areas. Magnetic and
aeromagnetic acquisitions delineate anomalies caused by the
changes in physical properties of the subsurface that lie
beneath a thick layer of sediments
Gravity
surveys
produce measurements of the gravitational field at a series of
different locations over an area of interest. The objective in
exploration work is to map density differences that may indicate
different rock types. Gravity data usually are displayed as
anomaly maps. |